Migrate Print Servers

07/26/2011

4 minutes to read

In this article

Applies To: Windows 7, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Vista

You can export print queues, printer settings, printer ports, and language monitors, and then import them on another print server running a Windows operating system. This is an efficient way to consolidate multiple print servers or replace an older print server.

Tools for print server migration

The tool you use to migrate print servers is determined by:

The source operating system you want to migrate from.

The destination operating system you want to migrate to.

Whether the migration involves 64-bit operating systems and drivers.

Supported migration scenarios

The following table describes the supported and unsupported migration scenarios for the Printer Migration Wizard and Print Migrator 3.1, whether x64-based systems and drivers are supported, and how to access each tool:

Does not support migration to Windows Vista and later operating systems.

No. 64-bit drivers or systems are not supported.

Available online. Print Migrator 3.1 was also shipped in resource kits for Windows 2000 Server and Windows Server 2003.

Migrating to computers running Windows Server 2003

If you are migrating from Windows NT Server 4 or Windows 2000 Server to Windows Server 2003, you must use Print Migrator 3.1. Print Migrator 3.1 will not work with Windows Vista or later operating systems. It is unable to work with system drivers. To migrate between x64 Windows Server 2003 systems, use the Print Migration Wizard.

Migrating to computers running Windows Server 2008 R2

Use the Printer Migration Wizard or the Printbrm.exe command-line tool to migrate to a computer running Windows Server 2008 R2. Use the Printbrm.exe command-line tool on computers running Windows Vista, and Windows Server 2008.

For an in-place upgrade (a reinstallation) of print servers, use the Print Migration Wizard to back up and restore the print server configuration. A standard system migration will not preserve print server information, and can result in print configuration data loss if the data has not been properly backed up before installing the new operating system.

Migrating print servers

Using the Windows interface

Using a command prompt

To migrate print servers by using Print Management

Open Print Management.

In left pane, click Print Servers, right-click the print server that contains the printer queues that you want to export, and then click Export printers to a file. This starts the Printer Migration Wizard.

On the Select the file location page, specify the location to save the printer settings, and then click Next to save the printers.

Right-click the destination computer on which you want to import the printers, and then click Import printers from a file. This launches the Printer Migration Wizard.

On the Select the file location page, specify the location of the printer settings file, and then click Next.

On the Select import options page, specify the following import options:

Import mode. Specifies what to do if a specific print queue already exists on the destination computer.

List in the directory. Specifies whether to publish the imported print queues in the Active Directory Domain Services.

The Universal Naming Convention (UNC) name of the source or destination computer.

<destinationcomputername>

The Universal Naming Convention (UNC) name of the destination computer.

<filename>

The file name for the printer settings file. Use the .printerExport or .cab file extensions.

Note

To view the complete syntax for this command, at a command prompt type: Printbrm /?

Additional considerations

To open Print Management, click Start, point to Administrative Tools, and then click Print Management.

You must have administrative credentials to perform this task.

The Printer Migration Wizard and Printbrm.exe can import custom forms and color profiles to the local computer only, and they do not support printer settings that are exported using the Print Migrator tool.

You can use the Task Scheduler feature of Windows to schedule the Printbrm.exe tool to regularly export or import printers. You can use this feature to supplement system backups.